Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Heinrich Fundraiser tonight

Maggie says:
If your inbox looks anything like mine, you've been e-mailed more reminders about tonight's Martin Heinrich fundraiser than you can count. So to come full circle, here's my little reminder to everyone else:


You are Invited
to a
Young Professionals Fundraiser
for
Martin Heinrich
Democratic Candidate for Congress

Tuesday, June 12, 2007
6:00 pm to 8:00 pm

O'Neill's Pub and Grill
4310 Central Ave. SE
(Central and Washington in East Nob Hill)

$100 Suggested Contribution
(all contributions accepted)

To contribute on-line go to: www.ActBlue.com

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Margaret Randall: Woman We Love

Maggie says:
I'm so proud to have been part of an amazing night for change last Friday. Amidst friends, music, and community, the SouthWest Organizing Project hosted a Silent Art Auction at the Central Park Deli in the Silver Moon Lodge for a very special cause.

Late next week, a delegation of 100 New Mexicans will travel together across the Deep South, with very special stops along the way to pick up fellow grassroots organizations, arriving in Atlanta for the U.S. Social Forum at the end of the month. The trip's going to be powerful, taking many folks through communities they otherwise might never see first-hand. The Social Forum itself will be an event to be remembered, and I love that the organizers chose the South as their host. Lucky for us, we'll get to experience the tour and the forum through one M's blogging (leave it to Marjorie to ensure wireless internet access on the bus!).

The highlight of Friday's auction was a collection of 19 Margaret Randall photographs from Nicaragua. I'd seen these photos in the shape that SWOP found them in previous to the event - a little bit dusty, a little bit disorganized, and basically the best "under the couch" kind of find a grassroots organization can hope for. That said, I was unprepared for the impact of seeing them displayed together, beautifully matted and framed, and signed by Randall herself. The photos were taken in 1979, just after the Sandinistas came to power, and the imagery is overwhelming. Take a look at the link above to see the entire collection and I think you'll agree.

In addition to the Randall photographs, the other highlight of the auction was a room full of political posters from all over the world. The variety was really amazing, and the collection was pretty outstanding.

For me, though, it had to be a Randall. Right away, one jumped out at me, and sure enough, the bidding escalated... but my shopping instincts took over (not to mention my texting instincts to a favorite co-buyer), and I won it in the end. Here's what I took home:


Tonight, I spent some time adding some nuance to what my winning bid got me (although owning an original photograph that I really adore is enough in itself). What I discovered was truly incredible, because I had no idea just how amazing a woman Margaret Randall is. (It's outrageous this woman doesn't have a wikipedia entry, by the way!) Her story - as told in a documentary I'd love to see, "The Unapologetic Life of Margaret Randall," takes her through chapters of poetry, photography, activism, art, and fiction so "subversive" that the U.S. government tried to deport her. The author of more than 70 books, "Sandino's Daughters: Testimonies of Nicaraguan Women in Struggle," is considered a classic. Happily, I discovered that my photograph appears in her book "Women Brave in the Face of Danger: Photographs of and Writing by Latin and North American Women."

Finally, the photo itself has a wonderful story of its own. Here's what Randall says about the moment she took it:

There was the day I spotted those lines from Leonel Rugama’s poem, jumped out of the jeep and raised my camera to capture the wall with the words “Los heroes, nuestros heroes, nunca dijeron que morían por la patria sino que murieron . . .” Three women carrying loads of wash walked into the picture plane, and turned and posed just as I snapped the shutter. Rugama had been a 20 year old seminary student when he was assassinated in 1967 by Somoza’s National Guard. Had he lived, he would have been one of his country’s finest poets. Many ordinary Nicaraguans know his poetry by heart.

I'm appalled I'd never before heard of Leonel Rugama, but reading more about him online and knowing the full context of this amazing photo, not to mention the woman who took it, makes me one satisfied SWOP contributor.

For more information on Margaret Randall, head over to the Center for Southwest Research at UNM. The Margaret Randall Papers are housed there, and include a significant amount of material and correspondence from throughout her life, much of it related to her lawsuit against the U.S. government over her immigration status. Now aging gracefully (and spunkily, I'm sure) in New Mexico, Randall recently signed all the mats at SWOP and was generous enough to write a reflection supporting the delegation to the U.S. Social Forum. No question about it; Margaret Randall has officially become one of m-pyre's "Women We Love."

For more information on how you can still contribute to the SWOP delegation, contact the office. And don't forget about SWOPblogger, too! Jo Ann, another woman we love, has been doing an incredible job over there. And I continue to give all the credit in the world to SWOP for being able to pull off such a fantastic night; I can only imagine the goodness that'll come out of the delegation.

PS: I swear the Central Park Deli has the best falafel sandwich in town. I know, who would've guessed?! They also have really kick-ass fries for when falafel's not going to cut it. Go support them when you're craving something good; they were extremely generous to SWOP in hosting the event and couldn't be nicer folks.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Immigration Reform is about Worker's Rights

marjorie says...

I’ve been struggling with how to say all the things that come up for me when I consider the reactionary attitude toward immigrants so prevalent in this country. As immigration has increased over the past decade, it’s obvious that much of this reaction is under girded by a strong racist impulse. Working people of a different culture and ethnicity are easy targets for the frustration and anger that ought to more accurately be directed at the top of the corporate/government pyramid. It’s at the top that decisions have been made resulting in the decimation of our manufacturing base, the decline of our labor unions, and the consequent shrinking of our middle class. Combine the historic racism so prevalent in this country with rampant job insecurity and you have a tailor made recipe for reactionary impulses toward a predominantly Latino immigrant working class.

When I get asked what my “solution” to the “immigration problem” is, I find myself struggling with how to answer without upending entirely the notion that there is a problem. Because I do believe there’s a problem, but it’s primarily a problem of how to take care of the needs of our lowest-paid workers, both immigrant and non-immigrant. It isn’t a problem of how to protect ourselves as a culture or an economy from a threatening horde of foreigners.

It disturbs me greatly to see the pitting of normal, everyday working people from this country against those who should be their allies in a struggle to maintain some semblance of economic equality in this country. The reality is that we are all enmeshed in a restructured global economy together, an economy in which a global capitalist class literally sucks the resources out of the global south to their benefit, leading to mass migrations of workers the world over to the richer, first world countries. At the same time, our own high wage manufacturing jobs have been taken away.

On our trip north to Colorado this week, I stopped with my co-workers at the Ludlow Massacre Memorial just northwest of Trinidad. To be in the space in which 24 distinct languages were spoken among a striking workforce that lived in a tent colony together for almost a year was just what I needed this week. The kind of unity that existed in that space in 1913 and 1914 is what we need now.

Right now there is great debate in the Senate about proposed immigration reform legislation. If a package gets passed, it will have enormous life consequences for millions of people who work here, and it will also greatly impact all of us in other ways.

For instance, one measure would build a fence along the U.S. Mexico border and greatly ramp up the military and police presence there. This isn’t to keep terrorists out…it’s to keep workers out. Frankly, I find the advocacy of, not to mention the building of, such a wall…immoral. It isn’t good for immigrants, nor is it good for my own peace of mind.

Concurrent with the border “security” provisions are proposals to create a worker program in which a person could hold their job for only two years. A New York Times editorial called this a system of modern peonage” and I wholeheartedly concur. I encourage all of you to read that editorial, in fact, for a better understanding of what is being considered by congress. You can see the editorial in its entirety on Swopblogger here, along with a breakdown this week of points to highlight in calls to Domenici and Bingaman, provided by Santa Fe immigrant’s rights organization Somos Un Pueblo Unido.

The immigration package being debated is going to change dramatically over the coming weeks. I believe that the package as originally proposed is a bad deal. But it’s possible that it could be fixed…please join me in communicating with our senators about what should be the core principles: the valuing of human rights and family unification for everyone who works in this country.

Some of the essential points, in my mind:

· All workers in this country regardless of status should be afforded safety, dignity, and a living wage.

· Building a wall and militarizing our border endangers the lives of working people and must be stopped.

· Immigration policy should recognize reality and provide a safe route to work in this country, and legal status to the millions who come here seeking work.

· The right to organize is fundamental to having a just and equal society, for all of us regardless of whether or not we are part of a union. This right needs to be protected and enhanced through our legal system. And we need to direct resources to organizing across the board.

Senator Bingaman: 505-346-6601.

Senator Domenici: 505-346-6791.

Or the DC switchboard: 800-417-7666.


En La Lucha!

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Rey Garduño for District Six: He's Running Clean!

marjorie says...

A good friend of mine, Rey Garduño, has announced his campaign for the District 6 City Council seat.

Rey is running a "Clean" campaign, which means he is undertaking a series of steps outlined through legislation to qualify for public financing of his campaign. Once he's successfully qualified he will not accept any private money to finance his campaign, including his own family money.

As a private citizen, Rey has been a strong advocate of clean elections legislation and ethics in government reform bills. I think its very fitting that he would now run for City Council utilizing the clean elections rules. In addition to his work in this area, I can attest to the strong progressive values that Rey holds and hope you will all take a moment to read more about him on his website.

For those of you living in District 6, I have another strong request: support the concept of "clean elections" by contributing $5 to Rey's campaign by the last week in May, which will qualify him as a "clean" candidate. The rules state that a candidate has to turn in just under 300 signatures with accompanying $5 contributions by the end of May in order to qualify. Let's all do as much as we can to ensure that all those who want to run clean campaigns are able to do so by meeting this benchmark. In fact, you can contribute the $5 to any and all candidates who are running in your district...because this is about ensuring that everyone is able to compete for office, not just those who have access to the big moneybags.

How can you contribute? Well, you can track me down because I have some of the forms. Or, you can contact Rey directly. In fact, he is having a "signing party" this Saturday. Please see below for a note from him and details about the signing party. And, please pass this information along to everyone you know who lives in District 6!


Dear Friends, Family, and Supporters of Rey Garduño for City Council District 6:
We are moving forward at a steady and measured pace with The Clean Elections process. We turned in to the City Clerk about a third of the necessary signatures and contributions on Tuesday the 15th; albeit, they need to be vetted. This is great; now, we need commitments from all of us to get at least five (5) of our friends and neighbors to come to a “Signing” Party at my house at 414 Vassar, NE in the UNM Campus (Directions below) from 10am-12pm this Saturday, May 19th
What is this signing party you ask? Quite simply it will be a centralized place where we can ask folks to sign the qualifying form and contribute $5 to democracy. This will qualify me to run as a clean candidate for City Council District 6 this fall, and not have to take campaign contributions from special interests. It is most urgent that we gather these signatures as soon as possible, our deadline is May 29; having begun the process now I can take the forms on a weekly basis to verify the signatures. The sooner we have 271 qualifying signatures the sooner we can begin the campaign and formulate how we are going to improve on the good initiatives already in District 6. Furthermore, we can build a framework cooperatively with the rest of the city to make this a great community.
Thank you in advance for your dedication to Democracy, to our community and my campaign.
Gracias, Rey Garduño
505-266-4424
414 Vassar NE: From Girard at Campus [street between Central and Lomas] you would go West on Campus into UNM campus turn North or right onto Vassar, the first house on the right is 414 Vassar).

Friday, May 11, 2007

State Rep. Miguel García statement about Posada Carriles

marjorie says...

Here is the statement released this morning by State Representative Miguel Garcia demanding that Posada Carriles be extradited to Venezuela. It was from Venezuela that Posada Carriles plotted and carried out his bombing of the Cuban airliner.

Statement in Support of Extradition of Luis Posada Carriles

Hon. Miguel P. García
New Mexico House of Representatives District 14

Albuquerque, New Mexico
May 11, 2007

Luis Posada Carriles committed the worst crime of terrorism in 1976 by masterminding a mid air bombing of a Cuban airliner killing seventy-three innocent human beings. These victims were our brother and sisters in Christ. They left behind a grieving spouse, sons and daughters, mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers, uncles, cousins, friends, colleagues, and neighbors.

American citizens are freedom loving individuals that deplore the innocent taking of a life by deranged individuals who have no respect for human decency. It has come to my attention that the Bush administration has created a precedent setting act of malfeasance in government by objectively giving Luis Posada Carriles card blanc asylum in the United States, knowing that Mr. Carriles illegally entered the United States in 2005.

Worst of all is the fact that the Bush administration fails to abide by international extradition laws pertaining to the harboring of terrorists. Venezuela is rightfully seeking extradition of Mr. Carriles to hold him accountable for the horrific tragedy of the 1976 incident.

As American citizens, we have an obligation to uphold our constitutional obligation in upholding the health, safety, and welfare of our communities. The Bush administration, by refusing to extradite Mr. Carriles, and by having his presence in our midst, gives us no choice but to side with our constitution and seek the “citizens arrest” of Luis Posada Carriles.

Freedom loving people in New Mexico and the United States must engage in an effort to apprehend Luis Posada Carriles and carry out a “citizens arrest” of the individual. Mr. Carriles creates a serious breach of peace in our presence with the potential for violent injury to our citizenship given his terrorist background.

I am committed to do what I can in my capacity as a State Representative to engage in a citizen to government relation with Venezuela to ensure the return of Luis Posada Carriles to that country for prosecution and incarceration of his terrorist act. It does us no good to engage in a “citizens arrest” of Mr. Carriles and turn him over to U.S. federal officials only to see him go free again in order to see him return to his mansion in Miami so he can continue watching the novelas on TV and drinking his rum & coke.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Support New Teen Art & Entertainment Center for ABQ

Mikaela says:
How many times have you heard a teen complain there's nowhere to go, nothing to do?

How many times have you heard this used as a reason why some kid or other got in trouble making trouble?

I'm not sure what the cool factor is on teen centers, but I know that having one is a lot better than not having one. This town owes its youth in a big, bad way. How do you discourage behavior you don't want? By encouraging behavior you do. We all know this. Well, most of us know this...

Tonight, you can do something about it and show your support.

WHAT:
City of Albuquerque Public Meeting with the City Council
about a new Teen Art & Entertainment Center

WHERE:
Taylor Ranch Community Center
4900 Kachina St. NW (Kachina & Montano)
Phone: (505)768-6006 Fax: (505)768-6009

Contacts:
  • Dave Pulliam, Community Recreation Center Supervisor (DPulliam@cabq.gov)
  • Patrick VanHorn, Community Recreation Activities Coordinator (PVanHorn@cabq.gov)
  • Marissa Kutzscher, Community Recreation Activities Coordinator (mkutzscher@cabq.gov)

Give the Terrrorist Posada Carriles the Boot!

marjorie says...

As Mikaela so aptly points out, the Bush Administration is completely hypocritical. One of the most egregious examples is playing out this very week with all charges against Luis Posada Carriles dropped by a federal judge in El Paso who said the Justice Department had improperly dealt with his case. Of course, the charges dropped were illegal immigration charges, not charges against Posada for his long history of terrorism. As we have pointed out numerous times on m-pyre (see here, here, here, and here) Posada is an international terrorist. This is acknowledged almost across the board. Even the U.S. government doesn't deny it.

How can the Bush administration continue to hold the banner high against "terrorism" and let an utter terrorist walk the streets of Miami freely? I'll tell you why...because the U.S. government is just fine with "terrorism" if the acts are done by those who act in accordance with U.S. foreign policy objectives. You want to blow up a plane full of people? And those are Cuban people? "Well...ok!! Because, you know, we don't like Cuba!"

That's exactly what this man did, and it's a well-known fact. So why isn't he being extradited to Venezuela, which is the country from which he plotted and carried out that act, a country which has had a long standing case against him that predates Chavez? He went on to engage in smaller terrorist acts for decades, moving from country to country. And seemingly, its just fine with our government.

He does not belong in this country unless we are utter hypocrites. Join us in a protest tomorrow at the Federal Courthouse. It's really too egregious to let slide by with a shake of our heads.

Bush Democracy=Hypocrisy

Mikaela says:
If I hear one more time that we're in Iraq to foster Democracy -- at the point of a gun and even if we have to wall off every faction from every other -- I'm going to scream. Cheney's heading to Iraq this week to intimidate its Parliament to move faster. Sounds like a healthy way to encourage an independent government, no?

The Bush Administration doesn't believe in democracy. It believes in loyalty at all costs. It's holding all of us hostage until it gets what it wants. Gotta love freeedom. Ah, America. Land of Tyranny with very long, bloody, not-so-invisible global arms.

Here's the latest evidence:

WASHINGTON, May 9 — Moderate Republicans gave President Bush a blunt warning on his Iraq policy at a private White House meeting this week, telling the president that conditions needed to improve markedly by fall or more Republicans would desert him on the war.
...

Participants in the Tuesday meeting between Mr. Bush, senior administration officials and 11 members of a moderate bloc of House Republicans said the lawmakers were unusually [emphasis added] candid with the president, telling him that public support for the war was crumbling in their swing districts.

One told Mr. Bush that voters back home favored a withdrawal even if it meant the war was judged a loss. Representative Tom Davis told Mr. Bush that the president’s approval rating was at 5 percent in one section of his northern Virginia district.

The response to this candid assessment and plea for sanity?

Mr. Bush made no commitments, but seemed grateful for their support and said a precipitous withdrawal from Iraq could cause the sort of chaos that occurred in Southeast Asia after Americans left Vietnam.
Meanwhile, speaking out of the other side of his smug mouth:

The White House on Wednesday promised a veto of the emerging House bill, which would essentially provide financing for combat operations through midsummer, but require the president to provide a series of reports on the state of the Iraqi military and the progress of the government in achieving political unity.

There's democracy in action.

More polls show that more and more Americans directly oppose the President and his misguided stubbornness putting American and Iraqi lives at risk (reposted from White House Watch):

Susan Page and William Risser write in USA Today: "Most Americans don't believe that the continued presence of U.S. troops in Iraq is the key to preventing a full-scale civil war there or protecting the United States from new terrorist attacks, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds.

"Amid broad pessimism about what's ahead for Iraq and the region, one-third of those surveyed would be bothered 'a great deal' if the United States is seen as losing the war. One in four would be bothered 'not at all.'

"Six in 10 support setting a timetable for withdrawal and sticking to it regardless of what's happening in Iraq; 36% say the United States should keep troops in Iraq until the situation there improves . . .

"Only 22% of Americans accept the administration's argument that U.S. forces in Iraq are preventing new terror attacks on the United States; 17% say the troop presence is making those attacks more likely. Another 58% say the U.S. deployment doesn't affect it either way."

CNN reports, similarly: "A majority of the U.S. public disapproves of President Bush's decision to veto a war spending bill that called for U.S. troops to leave Iraq in 2008, according to a CNN poll released Tuesday.

"The poll found that 54 percent of Americans opposed Bush's May 1 veto. . . .

"Now that the veto has been cast, 57 percent of Americans said they want Congress to send another spending bill with a timetable for withdrawal back to the White House, the poll found -- but 61 percent would support a new bill that dropped the timetables in favor of benchmarks for the Iraqi government to meet to maintain American support."



If only anyone trusted the Democrats to be strong enough to make that happen...

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Monday, May 07, 2007

All is not lost... Naomi Shihab Nye

Mikaela says:
Apologies, but I'm reposting from a YogaNow newsletter. Too good not to! This poet has several amazing books, including one of my favorite kids books these days, a collection of poems from around the world, "This Same Sky."

Wandering Around an Albuquerque Airport Terminal by Naomi Shihab Nye

After learning my flight was detained 4 hours, I heard the announcement: If anyone in the vicinity of gate 4-A understands any Arabic, please come to the gate immediately. Well one pauses these days. Gate 4-A was my own gate. I went there.

An older woman in full traditional Palestinian dress, just like my grandma wore, was crumpled to the floor, wailing loudly. Help, said the flight service person. Talk to her. What is her problem?

I put my arm around her and spoke to her haltingly. Shu dow-a, shu-biduck habibti, stani stani schway, min fadlick, sho bit se-wee? The minute she heard any words she knew however poorly used - she stopped crying.

She thought our flight had been cancelled entirely. She needed to be in El Paso for some major medical treatment the following day. I said no, no, we’re fine, you'll get there, just late, who is picking you up? Let’s call him and tell him. We called her son and I spoke with him in English.

I told him I would stay with his mother till we got on the plane and would ride next to her Southwest. She talked to him. Then we called her other sons just for the fun of it. Then we called my dad and he and she spoke for a while in Arabic and found out of course they had ten shared friends. Then I thought just for the heck of it why not call some Palestinian poets I know and let them chat with her. This all took up about 2 hours.

She was laughing a lot by then. Telling about her life. Answering questions. She had pulled a sack of homemade mamool cookies little powdered sugar crumbly mounds stuffed with dates and nuts out of her bag and was offering them to all the women at the gate.

To my amazement, not a single woman declined one. It was like a sacrament. The traveler from Argentina, the traveler from California, the lovely woman from Laredo; we were all covered with the same powdered sugar. And smiling. There are no better cookies.

And then the airline broke out the free beverages from huge coolers and the two little girls for our flight, one African-American, one Mexican-American ran around serving us all apple juice and lemonade and they were covered with powdered sugar, too. And I noticed my new best friend by now we were holding hands had a potted plant poking out of her bag, some medicinal thing, with green furry leaves.

Such an old country traveling tradition. Always carry a plant. Always stay rooted to somewhere. And I looked around that gate of late and weary ones and thought, this is the world I want to live in.

The shared world. Not a single person in this gate once the crying of confusion stopped has seemed apprehensive about any other person. They took the cookies. I wanted to hug all those other women, too.

This can still happen, anywhere. Not everything is lost.



Kindness -- Naomi Shihab-Nye

Before you know what kindness really is
You must lose things,
Feel the future dissolve in a moment
Like salt in a weakened broth.
What you held in your hand,
What you counted and carefully saved,
All this must go so you know
How desolate the landscape can be
Between the regions of kindness.
How you ride and ride
Thinking the bus will never stop,
The passengers eating maize and chicken
Will stare out the window forever.

Before you learn the tender gravity of kindness,
You must travel where the Indian in a white poncho
Lies dead by the side of the road.
You must see how this could be you,
How he too was someone
Who journeyed through the night with plans
And the simple breath that kept him alive.

Before you know kindness as the deepest thing inside,
You must know sorrow as the other deepest thing.
You must wake up with sorrow.
You must speak to it till your voice
Catches the thread of all sorrows
And you see the size of the cloth.

Then it is only kindness that makes sense anymore,
Only kindness that ties your shoes
And sends you out into the day to mail letters and purchase bread,
Only kindness that raises its head from the crowd of the world to say
It is I you have been looking for,
And then goes with you everywhere
Like a shadow or a friend.


Monday, April 30, 2007

Duke City BMX in the Front Yard

marjorie says...

I can't help but comment on news coverage about the BMX stadium.

Channel 7 led off tonight with the comment that neighbors are saying about the BMX stadium "Not in our Back Yards"...as if the case fits the stereotype of NIMBY neighbors. Let's clarify this ...the stadium is in the Front yard...just a little over 160 feet from the front yards to be exact. It's basically an open air shed...with no noise barriers at all. So why is it that the neighbors are characterized like this? And in the Journal they are characterized as "annoyed" and "complaining." I'm pleased to see the coverage, but these characterizations annoy me to the point of complaint.

On the news tonight, a spokesperson for city government had this to say:

“we want to work with the neighborhood as much as we can if they have issues, but again, the process was followed”

"Issues" is a rather benign word for what residents think is serious damage to their property values.


Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Must-read ABQ items of the day

Maggie says:
First, via m-pyre fave Gene Grant, a slice of Albuquerque's lack of accountability and planning power:

Albuquerque Tribune: BMX neighbors didn't sign up for monstrosity


More to come on this one.

And second, local father, husband, and grad student Adil Osman was finally freed yesterday after spending ten months in federal custody for an immigration dispute. Is an apology enough?

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Social Reproduction and Abortion

marjorie says...

I'd like to introduce you all to a very good friend of mine, Jo Ann Gutierrez Bejar, who is the new communications staff person at SWOP. Jo Ann has been putting up great commentary on swopblogger and I encourage you all to have a look. I particularly liked her comments about the Supreme Court decision last week to uphold the "partial birth" abortion ban. What I appreciate most about Jo Ann's comments are her views about the preponderance of males making these reproductive rights decisions. Reproduction is largely a woman's task. Let's face it...women are the ones who bear children and who raise children, by and large. I know there are some great men out there, who are very responsible when it comes to raising children. I'm fortunate to know several of them so don't take me wrong. But its indicative that they get the praise they get for childrearing by virtue of their gender. As if they deserve special praise for it. Well, in fact, they do. Because when it really comes down to it, by the numbers, its to women that the task of social reproduction in this society falls. And it should be women who make the decisions about whether or not to send another woman to prison for terminating her pregnancy.

Isn't that what we're talking about? Criminalizing women for terminating a pregnancy? We live in a society in which criminalization is our solution to perceived social problems...has anyone noticed? Jo Ann is equally right on in her admonishment to Archbishop Sheehan to make it easier for women to have their children and raise them without living in penury: "If you really want to bless us, make concrete changes to the economic and social structures in place. This new decision to uphold this ban is not only a set back for women, it's a precedent for dictatorship."

"Dictatorship" is an interesting choice of words. If you think of the status of women historically, we have obviously been a second class gender. When it comes to individual rights and economic status, clearly the women of our families historically were subject to men for their wellbeing. Its quite evident. In stories of the fabled anglo American west, for instance, women show up as either wives or whores (and I don't think its a given that I would automatically have preferred to be a wife, frankly).

If you've read my other commentary over the years about abortion and women's rights you know that I think the women's movement suffers from an almost myopic mobilization around abortion. Most women want to have children, very much. I want to live in a society in which women don't have to make economic decisions to not have children. I want the politically engaged women out there to work just as hard for socialized childcare as they do for the right to an abortion. And I want the rightwing, and the Catholic Church, to work just as hard for socialized childcare as they do to criminalize women who choose abortion. For instance.

As a woman, I'm quite fortunate to live during the era that I do, largely due to the women's rights movement in this country which struggled for centuries to achieve some measure of equality. Abortion is just part of that package. It's about the right of women to control their destinies through control of their own bodies. For this reason, I come down squarely on the pro-choice side and understand the importance of maintaining our rights in this area. But I wish for a different battleground entirely, one in which the fight is about expanding the wellbeing of families headed by single women. That is where we truly get into questions about the value of social reproduction to our society, and by extension the unrecognized economic and social value of women's work in the home.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

TONIGHT: Albuquerque Theater Cabaret

m-pyre favorite, Gene Grant, says:

April 12
8 pm
KIMO (Central & 5th)
FREE

Sixteen Albuquerque theater companies will be presenting ten minute pieces from all over the dramatic map.

I'm co-hosting with Chad Brummet from Tricklock, and performing with Darryl DeLoach in an excerpt from Suzan Lori-Parks, "Topdog/Underdog." Parks was the first African American woman to win a Pulitzer Prize for Drama with it in 2002.

Best of all the event is free. Stop on by. Should be a lot of fun!

Gene

"Here we are, trapped in the amber of the moment. There is no why." -- Kurt Vonnegut Passes

Mikaela says:
I suspect Marjorie is composing a tribute to Kurt Vonnegut, who died yesterday at the age of 84.

In the meantime, I wanted to mark his passing and share the following quote that has stayed with me from my favorite of his novels, Sirens of Titan (1959).

Harmoniums, which live off vibration, say only one of two things:

  • "I am here, I am here, I am here."
  • "So glad you are, so glad you are, so glad you are."
In a world gone crazy and murderous about our differences, I thank this fiction writer for imagining a world in which creatures can only be thankful to be alive and celebrate everyone around them, too.

"A purpose of human life, no matter who is controlling it, is to love whoever is around to be loved."

(More great quotes from Vonnegut here and here and here.)

Friday, April 06, 2007

The Final 12: 'Burque Come Choose Your Slam Team!!!

Mikaela asks:
So you know all about Slam, right?

  • You know that judges are chosen randomly from the audience.
  • You know Slam takes poetry out of the hands of snooty academics and back into the calloused hands of hard-working community members who know what they like when they hear it.
  • You know that the 4 poets chosen Saturday night travel to Austin in August (what a great play name, by the way) to represent us at the National Poetry Slam competition, which we won in 2005.
  • You know that you, too, can come Saturday and be a judge that chooses the team with the best shot to take our title back.
So what are you going to do about it?

I suggest humbly:
  • Stop everything, and get to the NHCC Journal Theatre Saturday night at 7:30 pm!
It really is the best and biggest poetry show you'll see all year, especially as we have no Nationals to look forward to as we did in 2005 (unless you go to Austin, in which case, CHEER LOUD FOR US, OKAY????!!!!).

You don't have to take my (admittedly biased) opinion for it: Read Steven Allen's.

The following are your poet contenders:

Don McIver

Jasmine Cuffee

Tony Santiago

Jessica Lopez

Jamen

Stephen Smith

Sal Treppiedi

Jon Paskiewicz

Jerry Mondragon

Ben Boreman

Manuel Gonzales

James Altimirano


See you there!

Pajama Men: New Show Opening This Weekend!

Mikaela raves:
Perennial favorite act of m-pyre, the Pajama Men are back with a brand-new show.


Q-Staff Presents

The Pajama Men

Versus vs. Versus
Holy smokes! The Pajama Men are back in Albuquerque with an all-new completely original performance.
The Pajama men will be premiering The Pajama Men:Versus vs. Versus at q-Staff Theatre Friday April 6th at 9:00 pm. (don't miss the opening night fun! Wear your pj's and get $5 off). Stick around for the post show opening night Pajama Party!
Ticket prices:
$15 general, $12 students and seniors

Saturday April 7th 9:00 p.m.
Sunday April 8th 7:00 pm: Pay what you can performance!
Every Friday and Saturday in April and May
9:00 pm
Every Sunday in April and May
7:00 pm
q-Staff Theatre
4819 Central NE (Across from the Highland Theater)
505-255-2182
Contact Person:
Sandy Timmerman
Following the Albuquerque premier The Pajama Men will jet set to some of the world’s biggest comedy festivals including The Edinburgh Festival, Just For Laughs in Montreal and The Melbourne Comedy Festival in Australia. Plus a run in Chicago produced by the legendary Second City . Catch’m while you can
Known for split second character switches and weaving together multiple story lines, the critically acclaimed Pajama Men engage in some of the most unusual and hilarious physical comedy ever staged. Over the past seven years Allen and Chavez have extensively toured North America and Europe, and recently were presented by Second City at Chicago’s famed Steppenwolf Theatre, marking the first collaboration between the two venerable organizations. Now’s your chance to see them do it all, right in front of your eyes; comedy magic, only without all the ta-da’s!
“Whip-smart and able to turn on the thinnest of dimes, Allen and Chavez are improvisers’ improvisers. Actors’ actors. Comedians’ comedians.”
- Chris Jones, Chicago Tribune
“Watching Shenoah Allen and Mark Chavez perform (in their PJs) is like watching your weirdest dreams melting together and bubbling on stage. Half the time, even they don't seem to know what's going to happen next….we can confidently guarantee this will be one of the funniest things you'll ever see. Queues for tickets will be huge.” - Alan Hindle, The Globe and Mail
“Allen and Chavez's comic high energy recalls the edgy, manic talent of Robin Williams but with more heart and whimsy. “ - Mary Houlihan, Chicago Sun Times

Monday, April 02, 2007

Humps indeed

Maggie sighs:
Some days, only Alanis can make it all better.

Know what I'm saying?

Question: What does the future hold for Urban Design in the Q?

Mikaela says:
Answer: Lots of debate!

Fresh off a morning meeting with fellow Planners Network folks, in which we talked about planning a panel discussion on community design, I'm greeted with this announcement for TONIGHT.

It will be more general, and it will be more ... um ... developer friendly, but someone should go and check it out (and report back).

Working stiffs, note the starting time is 4 pm.

"URBAN DESIGN FUTURES IN ALBUQUERQUE, a panel discussion"
Monday, April 2, 2007
4:00-6:00 PM
Santa Ana Room, Student Union Building (SUB), Upper Floor
Please note time and venue changes


The School of Architecture and Planning at the University of New Mexico will sponsor a panel and open discussion on urban design in Albuquerque in the 21st Century. This panel discussion is the final event of the John Gaw Meem Lecture Series for this semester.

The Panel members will include people with a variety of viewpoints including architects, landscape architects, planners, politicians, developers, students and others:

  • Miguel Gandert, Moderator, Professor Communications + Journalism, Photographer
  • Ike Benton, architect, City Councilor
  • Chris Calott, architect
  • Connie Chavez, president, Sawmill Trust
  • Dierdre Firth, planner, City of Albuquerque
  • Will Gleason, planner, Dekker Parich Sabatini
  • John Lewinger, developer
  • Paul Lusk, architect + planner
  • George Radnovich, landscape Architect, Principal, Sites Southwest
  • Noreen Richards, recently graduated student in Architecture
  • David Salamon, Architecture student

After a very short statement from each panel member the audience will be invited to engage in a lively discussion and debate.

Please note this event was originally scheduled to take place at Northrop Hall at 5:30. For further information please contact Dot Waldrip at 277-5885.